East Bay Times

How to get rid of rats minus brutality? Birth control is 1 idea

- By Maysoon Khan and Cedar Attanasio

New York lawmakers are proposing rules to humanely drive down the population of rats and other rodents, eyeing contracept­ion and a ban on glue traps as alternativ­es to poison or a slow, brutal death.

Politician­s have long come up with creative ways to battle the rodents, but some lawmakers are now proposing city and statewide measures to do more.

In New York City, the idea to distribute rat contracept­ives got fresh attention in city government recently following the death of an escaped zoo owl, known as Flaco, who was found dead with rat poison in his system.

City Councilmem­ber Shaun Abreu has proposed a city ordinance that would establish a pilot program for controllin­g the millions of rats lurking in subway stations and empty lots by using birth control instead of lethal chemicals. Abreu, chair of the Committee on Sanitation and Solid Waste Management, said the contracept­ives also are more ethical and humane than other methods.

The contracept­ive, called ContraPest, is contained in salty, fatty pellets that are scattered in rat-infested areas as bait.

It works by targeting ovarian function in female rats and disrupting sperm cell production in males, The New York Times reported.

New York exterminat­ors currently kill rats using snap and glue traps, poisons that make them bleed internally, and carbon monoxide gas that can suffocate them in burrows. Some hobbyists have even trained their dogs to hunt them.

Rashad Edwards, who runs pest management company Scurry Inc. in New York City with his wife, said the best method he has found when dealing with rodents is carbon monoxide.

He tries to use the most humane method possible and carbon monoxide euthanizes the rats slowly, putting them to sleep and killing them. Edwards avoids using rat poison whenever possible because it is dangerous and torturous to the rodents, he said.

Some lawmakers in Albany are considerin­g a statewide ban on glue boards under a bill moving through the Legislatur­e. The traps, usually made from a slab of cardboard or plastic coated in a sticky material, also can ensnare small animals that land on its surface.

Edwards opposes a ban on sticky traps, because he uses them on other pests, such as ants.

 ?? ROBERT MECEA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rats swarm around garbage near a dumpster in New York. Officials are seeking humane ways to kill the animals.
ROBERT MECEA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rats swarm around garbage near a dumpster in New York. Officials are seeking humane ways to kill the animals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States